Labioalveolar consonant
Appearance
| Labioalveolar | |
|---|---|
| ◌͇ | |
| ◌ |
Labioalveolar consonants are articulated with the lower lip against the alveolar ridge. They are only found in disordered speech, typically occurring in speakers with excessive overbite when articulating labial consonants.[1] In the extIPA, they are represented with the alveolar diacritic ⟨◌͇⟩ on the corresponding labial. To avoid descenders, it may be placed above instead: ⟨◌⟩.[2][3]
List of consonants in the extIPA
[edit]| extIPA symbol | Description |
|---|---|
| m͇̊ | Voiceless labioalveolar nasal |
| m͇ | Voiced labioalveolar nasal |
| p | Voiceless labioalveolar plosive |
| b͇ | Voiced labioalveolar plosive |
| ⓘ | Voiceless labioalveolar fricative |
| ⓘ | Voiced labioalveolar fricative |
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Places and manners of articulation Glides". www.almerja.com.
- ^ Rybka Piotr Klaudiusz. "Międzynarodowy alfabet fonetyczny w slawistyce". opus.us.edu.pl (in Polish). University of Silesia (Polish: Uniwersytet Śląski).
- ^ Kirk Miller (2024-03-31). "Unicode request for IPA diacritics above and one below" (PDF). www.unicode.org. Unicode Consortium.